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Ghana’s corporate regulatory landscape has shifted significantly in the first half of 2026, and corporate lawyers Ghana-wide are advising clients to act before enforcement measures take effect. Parliament’s passage of the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA) Bill 2026, the successor legislation to the GIPC Act, 2013 (Act 865), has introduced revised minimum foreign capital thresholds, new registration obligations and restructured incentive frameworks. Simultaneously, the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC), operating under the Registrar General’s Department (RGD), issued updated guidance in April 2026 on annual return deadlines, business name renewal procedures and penalty schedules. Together, these changes impose concrete, time-bound obligations on every company incorporated or operating in Ghana, whether domestically owned, foreign-invested or operating through a branch office.
This guide sets out exactly what general counsels, CFOs, company secretaries and business owners need to do, now, to achieve full Ghana company compliance under the reformed framework. It covers the new minimum stated capital requirements, the ORC annual returns 2026 filing calendar, the practical impact of the GIPC Bill 2026, and step-by-step procedures for amending company records, share capital and shareholders’ agreements.
Key takeaways:
Two parallel regulatory developments have reshaped corporate compliance obligations for companies operating in Ghana. Understanding the interplay between them is essential for any company seeking to remain in good standing.
The first development is legislative. The Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026, commonly referred to as the GIPA Bill, was laid before Parliament in Q1 2026 and received presidential assent in April 2026. The Act replaces the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre Act, 2013 (Act 865), reconstituting the GIPC as the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA). Industry observers expect the new Authority to exercise broader oversight powers, including enhanced monitoring of compliance with minimum capital requirements and local participation obligations. The Act also recalibrates the minimum foreign capital thresholds that have remained unchanged since 2013, adjusting them upward to reflect inflation and policy objectives around local enterprise development.
The second development is administrative. In April 2026, the ORC published revised guidance on annual return filing procedures, fee schedules and the penalty framework for non-compliance. The guidance consolidates earlier circulars and introduces electronic filing as the default submission channel for companies in the Greater Accra and Ashanti regions, with phased rollout to other regions. It also clarifies the consequences of late filing: companies that miss the statutory deadline face financial penalties, and those that fail to file for two consecutive years risk being flagged for involuntary striking-off under the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992).
Taken together, these changes mean that virtually every company on the Ghana register, and every foreign investor with a GIPC-registered enterprise, now has specific compliance actions to complete before prescribed deadlines. The practical effect extends beyond simple form-filling: in many cases, companies will need board and shareholder approvals, amended constitutional documents and updated share certificates.
| Date | Event | Impact on companies |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | GIPA Bill laid before Parliament | Signals forthcoming changes to minimum capital and registration regime |
| April 2026 | GIPA Bill receives presidential assent, GIPA Act commences | New minimum foreign capital thresholds and GIPA registration obligations take immediate effect, subject to transitional provisions |
| April 2026 | ORC issues updated annual return and filing guidance | Electronic filing becomes default; revised penalty schedule applies to 2025 financial year returns onward |
| 30 June 2026 | Deadline for ORC annual returns (2025 financial year) | Companies must file complete annual returns or face escalating penalties |
| 31 December 2026 | End of GIPA Act transitional period (anticipated) | All GIPC-registered enterprises expected to have transitioned to GIPA registration and confirmed compliance with revised capital thresholds |
The minimum stated capital requirements in Ghana have historically served a dual purpose: ensuring that companies have adequate capitalisation to meet creditor expectations, and regulating foreign participation in the economy. The Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992) sets the baseline framework for stated capital, while the GIPC Act, 2013 (Act 865), now superseded by the GIPA Act 2026, imposed additional minimum capital requirements specifically on enterprises with foreign participation.
Under the GIPA Act 2026, the minimum capital thresholds for foreign-participated enterprises have been revised upward. The previous GIPC Act required a minimum foreign capital contribution of US $200,000 for a joint venture with a Ghanaian partner, and US $500,000 for a wholly foreign-owned enterprise. The GIPA Act adjusts these figures to reflect current economic realities and policy objectives. Early indications suggest the revised thresholds represent meaningful increases, and companies that were capitalised at or near the old minima will need to verify whether their existing stated capital meets the new floor.
For domestic companies with no foreign participation, the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992) does not prescribe a fixed minimum stated capital for private limited companies. Public companies, however, must meet prescribed minimum capitalisation levels, and companies operating in regulated sectors, banking, insurance, securities, telecommunications, face sector-specific capital requirements imposed by their respective regulators (Bank of Ghana, National Insurance Commission, Securities and Exchange Commission, National Communications Authority).
| Entity Type | Minimum Stated Capital (2026) | Notes on Applicability |
|---|---|---|
| Private limited company (domestic, no foreign participation) | No statutory minimum under Act 992 | Sector-specific regulators may impose separate requirements |
| Public company (domestic) | As prescribed under Act 992 and relevant regulations | Must also comply with SEC Ghana listing requirements where applicable |
| Joint venture with foreign participation | Revised minimum under GIPA Act 2026 (previously US $200,000 under Act 865) | Foreign partner must contribute minimum capital in foreign currency or capital goods; transitional period applies |
| Wholly foreign-owned enterprise | Revised minimum under GIPA Act 2026 (previously US $500,000 under Act 865) | Must register with GIPA and provide evidence of capital importation |
| Foreign branch / external company | Minimum capital as specified by GIPA Act 2026 and ORC registration requirements | Must appoint a local agent; annual filings with ORC required |
Where a company needs to increase its stated capital to meet the revised minimum, a shareholder resolution is required. The following template provides a starting point, it should be adapted to the company’s specific constitutional documents and reviewed by qualified corporate lawyers in Ghana before adoption:
“RESOLVED THAT the stated capital of the Company be and is hereby increased from [current amount] to [new amount] by the creation and allotment of [number] additional ordinary shares of no par value, to be paid for in [cash / foreign currency / capital goods] at a price of [amount] per share, in compliance with the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Act, 2026 and the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992).”
The resolution must be passed by ordinary resolution (simple majority) unless the company’s constitution requires a special resolution for capital changes. After passage, the company must file the prescribed forms with the ORC within 28 days, together with the updated statement of stated capital and evidence of payment or capital importation.
The ORC annual return is the single most important periodic compliance obligation for companies registered in Ghana. Under the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992), every company must deliver an annual return to the Registrar within the prescribed period after its financial year-end. The April 2026 ORC guidance confirms that the deadline for companies with a 31 December financial year-end is 30 June 2026. Companies with non-standard financial year-ends should calculate their deadline as six months after the relevant year-end date.
The updated guidance introduces several practical changes. Electronic filing through the ORC’s online portal is now the default submission method for companies registered in the Greater Accra and Ashanti regions. Companies in other regions may continue to file in person at regional ORC offices during the transition period, but the long-term policy direction is full digitisation. Filing fees have been updated in line with the new fee schedule published alongside the guidance.
The April 2026 ORC guidance spells out a graduated penalty framework for late filing. Companies that miss the 30 June deadline face an initial financial penalty, with additional charges accruing for each month of continued non-compliance. The penalty amounts are scaled by company type, with public companies and external companies facing higher charges than small private companies.
Beyond financial penalties, the practical enforcement risks are significant. A company that fails to file annual returns for two consecutive years may be flagged for involuntary striking-off under Section 298 of the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992). Striking-off does not extinguish the company’s liabilities, directors may face personal exposure, and the company’s assets may vest in the state. The Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) also cross-references ORC filing data with tax records, meaning that a company in default at the ORC is likely to attract GRA scrutiny as well.
For foreign-owned enterprises, the consequences extend further. A company that is not in good standing with the ORC may be unable to obtain or renew the permits and certificates required by GIPA, creating a cascading compliance failure. The likely practical effect is that foreign investors who neglect ORC filings will find their investment approvals jeopardised, potentially triggering enforcement action under both the Companies Act and the new GIPA Act simultaneously.
The GIPA Act 2026 replaces the GIPC Act, 2013 (Act 865) as the primary legislation governing foreign investment promotion and regulation in Ghana. For foreign investors and their Ghanaian joint venture partners, the transition from GIPC to GIPA involves several concrete compliance obligations that require immediate attention from qualified corporate lawyers in Ghana.
The Act reconstitutes the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre as the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority, with an expanded mandate that includes enhanced monitoring, compliance verification and enforcement powers. While the fundamental architecture of foreign investor registration remains recognisable, the details have changed in ways that affect capital requirements, reporting obligations and the scope of available incentives.
The GIPA Act maintains the general principle that enterprises with foreign participation must register with the Authority and meet minimum capital requirements. However, the revised capital thresholds and the introduction of more rigorous compliance verification mechanisms mean that companies registered under the old GIPC regime cannot simply assume continuity. Industry observers expect GIPA to take a more active enforcement posture than its predecessor, particularly with respect to companies that registered at the minimum capital level and have not subsequently increased their capitalisation.
Foreign investors establishing a new enterprise in Ghana must register with GIPA before commencing business operations. The registration process requires the following core documents:
Existing enterprises registered under the GIPC Act should proactively contact GIPA to confirm whether their registration transfers automatically or whether a fresh application is required. The transitional provisions in the GIPA Act address this question, but the practical implementation details are still being finalised by the Authority. The prudent course is to engage with GIPA early, rather than waiting for enforcement notices.
A common source of confusion is the relationship between GIPA registration and ORC compliance. These are separate but interdependent obligations. ORC registration under the Companies Act creates the legal entity; GIPA registration authorises the foreign-participated enterprise to carry on business. A company cannot obtain GIPA registration without first being incorporated at the ORC, and a company in default on its ORC filings may find its GIPA registration suspended or revoked.
The practical implication is that foreign investor capital rules require simultaneous compliance with both regimes. A company that increases its stated capital to meet the new GIPA minimums must file the capital increase with the ORC (within 28 days of the shareholder resolution) and then notify GIPA with evidence of the additional capital importation. Failing to update either body creates an inconsistency that can be exploited by regulators, or by commercial counterparties conducting due diligence.
Companies that need to increase their stated capital, amend their constitutional documents or update their shareholder agreements in light of the 2026 reforms should follow a structured process. The procedure for company registration changes in Ghana involves several stages, each with its own documentary and timing requirements.
Capital increase by new allotment:
Conversion of debt to equity:
When amending shareholders’ agreements to reflect the new capital structure, several drafting pitfalls commonly arise:
The enforcement landscape for Ghana company compliance is evolving. Historically, the ORC and GIPC took a relatively lenient approach to non-compliance, with enforcement action concentrated on high-profile cases or triggered by third-party complaints. Industry observers expect the new GIPA regime to adopt a more systematic enforcement posture, supported by improved data-sharing between GIPA, the ORC, the GRA and the Bank of Ghana.
Consider a representative scenario: a foreign-owned technology company incorporated in 2018 with stated capital of US $500,000, registered with the GIPC under Act 865. The company has filed annual returns sporadically, missing the 2023 and 2024 filings, and has not increased its stated capital since incorporation. Under the reformed framework, this company faces three overlapping compliance exposures. First, it is in default on two years of ORC annual returns, exposing it to financial penalties and potential striking-off. Second, it must verify whether its existing stated capital meets the revised GIPA minimums and, if not, execute a capital increase. Third, its GIPC registration must be transitioned to GIPA, which GIPA may decline to process while the company remains in ORC default.
The cascading effect of these failures is the critical practical risk. Each compliance gap amplifies the others, and remediation becomes significantly more expensive and time-consuming once enforcement action has commenced. Companies that address all three issues proactively, ideally with the assistance of experienced corporate lawyers in Ghana, can typically resolve the situation within 60 to 90 days. Companies that wait for enforcement notices may face protracted engagement with multiple regulators, potential director liability, and reputational damage that affects commercial relationships.
The following compliance matrix summarises the key actions by entity type. Companies should use this as a starting point and adapt it to their specific circumstances. A GIPC/GIPA compliance checklist tailored to the company’s sector, shareholder structure and current filing status should be prepared with legal counsel.
| Action | Who Is Responsible | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| File ORC annual return for 2025 financial year | Company secretary / in-house counsel | 30 June 2026 |
| Verify stated capital against revised GIPA minimums | CFO / company secretary / corporate counsel | Immediately, before transitional deadline |
| Pass shareholder resolution for capital increase (if required) | Board of directors / shareholders | Within 60 days of identifying shortfall |
| File capital increase documents with ORC | Company secretary / corporate counsel | Within 28 days of shareholder resolution |
| Transition GIPC registration to GIPA | Managing director / compliance officer | Before 31 December 2026 (anticipated transitional deadline) |
| Renew business name registration (if applicable) | Company secretary | Per ORC renewal schedule, check expiry date |
| Update shareholders’ agreement to reflect new capital and GIPA compliance | Corporate counsel / external advisors | Concurrent with capital increase |
| Notify GRA of any changes to company structure or capital | Tax compliance officer / CFO | Within 30 days of change |
Quick compliance matrix by entity type:
| Entity Type | ORC Annual Return / Filing Deadline 2026 | Minimum Stated Capital Requirement (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Private limited company (domestic) | 30 June 2026 (for 31 Dec year-end) | No statutory minimum under Act 992; sector regulators may apply separate requirements |
| Public company | 30 June 2026; additional disclosure obligations including audited financials | As prescribed under Act 992 and SEC Ghana regulations |
| Foreign branch / external company | 30 June 2026; filed by local agent | Subject to GIPA Act 2026 requirements; must provide evidence of capital importation |
| Joint venture (foreign participation) | 30 June 2026 | Revised minimum under GIPA Act 2026 (previously US $200,000 under Act 865) |
| Wholly foreign-owned enterprise | 30 June 2026 | Revised minimum under GIPA Act 2026 (previously US $500,000 under Act 865) |
Companies requiring editable board resolution and shareholder resolution templates for stated capital amendments can request these through the advisory contact provided at the end of this guide. The templates are designed for adaptation to individual company constitutions and should be reviewed by qualified counsel before use.
The 2026 reforms to Ghana’s corporate and investment regulatory framework, the GIPA Act and the updated ORC filing guidance, impose concrete, time-bound obligations that cannot be deferred. Every company on the Ghana register should verify its ORC filing status, confirm its stated capital against the revised GIPA thresholds and take the necessary board and shareholder actions before deadlines pass. Experienced corporate lawyers Ghana-based are essential partners in this process, particularly where capital restructuring, multi-jurisdictional shareholder structures or sector-specific regulatory overlaps add complexity. Companies that act now will avoid the cascading enforcement risks that accompany delayed compliance, and will be well positioned to take advantage of the incentive and facilitation frameworks that the new GIPA regime offers to compliant investors.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Oliver Barker-Vormawor at MERTON & EVERETT LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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